Data storage with virtual appliances

ABSTRACT

A data storage system has at least two universal nodes each having CPU resources, memory resources, network interface resources, and a storage virtualizer. A system controller communicates with all of the nodes. Each storage virtualizer in each universal node is allocated by the system controller a number of storage provider resources that it manages. The system controller maintains a map for dependency of virtual appliances to storage providers, and the storage virtualizer provides storage to its dependent virtual appliances either locally or through a network protocol (N_IOC, S_IOC) to another universal node. The storage virtualizer manages storage providers and is tolerant to fault conditions. The storage virtualizer can migrate from any one universal node to any other universal node.

This application is a divisional of application Serial No. 14/406,678 filed on Dec. 9, 2014, which is a 371 national phase of application Serial No. PCT/EP2013/063437 filed Jun. 26, 2013, all of which are incorporated herein in their entirety by reference.

FIELD OF THE INVENTION

The invention relates to data storage and more particularly to organisation of functional nodes in providing storage to consumers.

Virtual Appliances (VA), also known as Virtual Machines, are created through the use of a Hypervisor application, Hypervisor, network, and compute and storage resources. They are described for example in US 2010/0228903 (Chandrasekaran). Resources for the virtual appliances are provided by software and hardware for network, compute and storage functions. The generally accepted definition of a VA is an aggregation of a guest operating system, using virtualised compute, memory, network and storage resources within a Hypervisor environment.

Network resources include networks, virtual LANs (VLANs), tunneled connections, private and public IP addresses and any other networking structure required to move data from the appliance to the user of the appliance.

Compute resources include memory and processor resources required to run the appliance guest operation system and its application program.

Storage resources consist of storage media mapped to each virtual appliance through an access protocol. The access protocol could be a block storage protocol such as SAS, Fibre Channel, iSCSI or a file access protocol for example CIFS, NFS, and AFT.

At present, the cloud may be used to virtualise these resources, in which a Hypervisor Application manages user dashboard requests and creates, launches and manages the VA (virtual appliance) and the resources that the appliance requires. This framework can be best understood as a general purpose cloud but is not limited to a cloud. Example implementations are OpenStack™, EMC Vsphere™, and Citrix Cloudstack™.

In many current implementations compute, storage and network nodes are arranged in a rack configuration, cabled together and configured so that virtual machines can be resourced from the datacenter infrastructure, launched and used by the end user.

The architectures of FIG. 1 and FIG. 2 share storage between nodes and a storage array, in which failure on the storage array will result in loss of all the dependent appliances on that storage. FIG. 1 shows an arrangement with compute nodes accessing through a fabric integrated HA (high availibility) storage systems with a dual redundant controller. FIG. 2 shows an arrangement with compute nodes accessing through a fabric an integrated HA storage system, in which each storage system accesses the disk media through a second fabric, improving failure coverage.

Resiliency and fault tolerance is provided by the storage node using dual controllers (eg. FIG. 1 C#1,1 & C#1.2). In the case of controller failure the volume resources that fail will be taken over and managed by the remaining controller.

These known architectures suffer from a number of drawbacks which can be best understood through an FMEA (Failure Mode Effects Analysis) table, below.

FMEA Analysis Table

Failure Critical Remarks Single controller No Redundant 2nd controller FIG. 1 failure within a can manage storage. storage node Dual controller Yes No controller available FIG. 1 failure within a to manage storage, all storage node attached appliances will fail. Dual controller No Dual controller storage FIG. 2 failure within a nodes functioning as a Requires host storage node cluster can recover disk and disk resource fabrics All storage Yes No available storage FIG. 2 nodes fail node to manage storage requires host and disk fabrics

US2010/0228903 (Chandrasekaran et al) discloses disk operations by a VA from a virtual machine (VM).

WO2011/049574 (Hewlett-Packard) describes a method of virtualized migration control, including conditions for blocking a VM frin accessing data.

WO2011/046813 (Veeam Software) describes a system for verifying VM data tiles. US2011/0196842 (Veeam Software) describes a system for restoring a file system object from an image level backup.

The invention is directed towards providing an improved data storage system with more versatility in its architecture.

GLOSSARY

DAS, disk array storage

FMEA, Failure Mode Effects Analysis

HA, high availability

QoS, quality of service

SAV, storage area volume

SC, storage consumers

SLA, service level agreement

SP, storage providers

SPR, storage provisioning requester API

SV, storage visualizer

U-node, universal node

VM, Virtual machine

VA, Virtual appliance

VB, virtual block devices

SUMMARY OF THE INVENTION

According to the invention, there is provided a data storage system comprising:

-   -   at least two universal nodes each comprising:         -   CPU resources,         -   memory resources,         -   network interface resources, and         -   a storage virtualiser; and     -   a system controller,     -   wherein each storage virtualizer in each universal node is         allocated by the system controller a number of storage provider         resources that it manages,     -   wherein the system controller maintains a map for dependency of         virtual appliances to storage providers, and the storage         virtualiser provides storage to its dependent virtual appliances         either locally or through a network protocol to another         universal node.

In one embodiment, said CPU, memory, network interface and storage virtualizer resources are connected between buses within each universal node, wherein at least one of said buses links said resources with virtual appliance instances, and wherein each universal node comprises a Hyper-visor application for the virtual appliance instances.

In one embodiment, the storage virtualizer manages storage providers and is tolerant to fault conditions.

In one embodiment, the fault tolerance is achieved by an ability of the storage virtualiser to migrate from any one universal node to any other universal node.

In one embodiment, the storage virtualiser is attached to storage devices through a storage bus organised so that a plurality of universal nodes have the same access to a fabric and drives attached to the fabric. Preferably, a plurality of storage devices can be discovered by a plurality of universal nodes. Preferably, each storage virtualiser behaves as if it were a locally attached storage array with coupling between the storage devices and the universal node.

In one embodiment, the system controller is adapted to partition and fit the virtual appliances within each universal node.

In one embodiment, the universal nodes are configured so that in the case of a system failure each paired universal node will failover resources and workloads to each other.

In one embodiment, a Hypervisor application manages requesting and allocation of these resources within each universal node.

In one embodiment, the system further comprises a provisioning engine, and a Hypervisor application is adapted to use an API to request storage from the provisioning engine, which is in turn adapted to request a storage array to create a storage volume and export it to the Hypervisor application through the storage virtualiser.

In one embodiment, to satisfy storage requirements of virtual appliances in a universal node, each local storage array is adapted to respond to requests from a storage provisioning requester running on the universal node.

In one embodiment, the universal nodes are identical.

In one embodiment, the system controller is adapted to execute an algorithm for leadership election between peer universal nodes for failover protection. Preferably, the system controller is adapted to allow each universal node to paritcipate in a leadership election. In one embodiment, each universal node is adapted to execute a leadership role which follows a state machine. In one embodiment, an elected leader is responsible for logically organising the universal nodes into teams with failure links. Preferably, each universal node is adapted to, if elected, create a configuration of nodes, and in the case of a node failure, the remaining configured nodes use their knowledge of pairing to recover from the failure.

In one embodiment, failover and/or fallback of resources occurs between paired nodes, the leader is responsible for creating pairs, and all nodes are responsible for ensuring that their pairs are present and functioning.

In one embodiment, the system controller is adapted to dispatch workloads including virtual appliances to the universal nodes interfacing directly with the system controller or with a Hypervisor application.

In one embodiment, each storage virtualizer is attached to a set of storage provider devices by the system controller, and if any universal node fails any other universal node can be reconfigured by the system controller to take over the provider devices, recreate the virtual block resources for the recreated consumer virtua appliancess. Preferably, context, state and data can be recovered through the system controller in the event of failure of a universal node.

In one embodiment, the system controller is responsible for dispatching workloads including virtual blocks to the universal nodes interfacing directly with a Hypervisor application of the universal node.

In one embodiment, the Hypervisor application has an API which allows creation and execution of virtual appliances, and the Hypervisor application requests CPU, memory, and storage resources from the CPU, memory and storage managers, and a storage representation is implemented as if the storage were local, in which the storage virtualization virtual block is a virtualisation of a storage provider resource.

In one embodiment, the system controller is adapted to hold information about the system to allow each node to make decisions regarding optimal distribution of workloads.

In one embodiment, virtual appliances that use storage provided by the storage virtualizer may run locally on the universal node where the storage virtualizer has migrated to or can be run on another universal node.

In one embodiment, the system controller is responsible for portioning and fitting of storage provider resources to each universal node, and in the case of a failure it detects the failure and migrates failed storage virtualizer virtual blocks to available universal nodes, do the system controller maintains a map and dependency list of storage virtualizer resources to every storage provider storage array.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE INVENTION BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

The invention will be more clearly understood from the following description of some embodiments thereof, given by way of example only with reference to the accompanying drawings in which:—

FIG. 1 shows a prior art arrangement as discussed above, with compute nodes accessing through a fabric integrated HA (High Availibility) storage systems with a dual redundant controller;

FIG. 2 shows a prior art arrangement as discussed above, with compute nodes accessing through a fabric an integrated HA storage system, in which each storage system acesses the disk media through a second fabric, improving failure coverage;

FIG. 3 shows overall architecture of a system of the invention, in which a number of universal nodes (U-nodes) are linked via a fabric with storage resources,

FIG. 4 shows an individual U-node broken out into its components;

FIG. 5 shows how multiple U-nodes are arranged in a system, in one embodiment;

FIGS. 6 to 8 show linking of resources;

FIG. 9 shows failure recovery scenarios;

FIG. 10 shows how policies are used to dispatch workloads to paired U-nodes; and

FIG. 11 is a flow diagram illustrating operation of a U-node in one embodiment.

DESCRIPTION OF THE EMBODIMENTS

FIGS. 3, 4 and 5 show a system 1 of the invention with a number of U-nodes 2 linked by a fabric 3 to storage providers 4. The latter include for example JBOD drives. The U-node 2 is shown in FIG. 4, and FIG. 5 shows more detail about how it links with consumers and storage providers (via buses N_IOC and S_IOC).

Each U-node 2 has a storage virtualiser 20 along with CPU, memory, and network resources 12, 13, and 14. Each U-node also includes VAs 17, a Hypervisor application 18, a Hypervisor 15 above the resources 12-14 and 20. The N-IOC and the S_IOC interfaces 20 and 19 are linked with the operating system 16.

FIG. 4 illustrates a U-Node 1 in more detail. It is used as one of the basic building blocks to build virtual appliances from a pool of identical U-Nodes. Each U-Node provides CPU, memory, storage and network resources for each appliance. CPU managers 12, memory managers 13, and network managers 14 are coupled very tightly within the U-Node across local high speed buses to a Hypervisor layer 15 and an Operating System (OP) layer 16.

The storage resources provided by the SV layer 20 appear as if the storage was a local DAS. The U-Node allows Virtual Appliances 17(a) to run within virtual networks 17(b) in a very tightly coupled configuration of compute-storage-networking which is fault tolerant.

The U-node, via its storage virtualiser (SV), is a universal consumer of storage providers (SP) and a provider of virtual block devices (VB) to a universal set of storage consumers (SC). The storage virtualiser is implemented on each node as an inline storage layer that provides VB storage to a local storage consumer or a consumer across a fabric. Storage virtualiser 20 instances are managed by a separate controller (the “MetaC” controller) 31 which controls a number of U-nodes 2 and holds all the SV context and state. Referring again to FIG. 5 in a system 30 the UT-nodes 2 are linked to an N_IOC bus as is the metaC controller 31. SPs 34 are linked with the S_IOC bus.

The storage virtualisers SV 20 are implemented as slave devices without context or state. In one embodiment the SV 20 is composed of storage consumer managers and storage provider managers, however all context and state are stored in the meta_C component 31. This allows the node 2 to fail without loss of critical metadata and the metaC controller 31 can reconstitute all the resources provided by the slave SV linstance. The SV decouples the mapping between the SPs and the SCs. By introducing the SV link the SP and the SC are now mobile.

In the prior the art, for example FIG. 1, the consumer nodes above the fabric maintain mappings to storage in the SP. In the invention however, the SV 20 decouples these mappings and the U-nodes communicate with each other and the MetaC controller 31. Referring to FIG. 3 and FIG. 4 if a U-node 2 fails there is no meta data or state information in the failed node. All meta data and state is stored in the metaC controller 31; this allows the resources (VBs) managed by the failed SV to be recreated on any other U-node.

The SV 20 has functions for targets, managers, and provider management. These functions communicate via an API to the metaC controller 31. In this embodiment the metaC controller 31 maintains state and context information across all of the U-nodes of the system.

In summary, what we term the SV is a combinaton of the SV slave functionality on the U-node and functionality on the metaC 31. There is one metaC per multiple U-nodes.

Referring to FIGS. 5 and 11, in the system;

-   -   The U-nodes 2 have Storage Consumers (SC) such as Virtual         Appliances (VAs) or Storage Centric Services (SCS) such as         object storage, Hadoop storage, Lustre storage etc     -   There are links with storage providers 34 (SPs) such as disks,         storage arrays and Storage Centric Services     -   The SV 20 consumes storage from the SPs in the system and         provides virtual block devices (VB) to the SCs in the system.     -   The (out of band) controller metaC 31 manages the creation of         storage pros on the SP devices, and manages the importing of         storage from the storage providers SP, and manages the creation         of VB devices and exporting the VB devices to the SC.     -   The metaC provides a high level API (HL_API) interface to SCs.

The system manages a storage pool that can scale from simple DAS storage to multiple horizontally-scaled SANS across multiple fabrics and protocols. Unlike conventional storage systems, the system of the invention uses an SV on each node to represent resources on the SPs. The resources created by the SV are virtual block devices (VB). A virtual block device (VB) is a virtualisation of an SP resource. The SV is managed by the metaC controller 31.

By introducing a stateless storage middleware on each node the following benefits are derived.

-   -   The stateless SV having no context or state allows the node to         fail with only transient impact to the system since the MetaC         controller 31 can reconstitute all resources on available nodes         from the MetaC context and state.     -   The SV can consume any storage from any provider across any         protocol and fabric; knowledge of the fabric is not required in         the SV, only in the MetaC, controller.     -   The SV as a middleware between the storage consumer and storage         provider allows a range of added value functions such as         -   Data protection by mapping and replicating the VB to             multiple Storage Array Volumes (SAV)         -   Data scaling by striping the VB across multiple SAVs         -   Redundant multipathing by mapping the VB to different             instances of the SAV on alternate paths         -   Node side SSD caching by introducing an SSD caching layer             between the VB and the SAV         -   VB rate limiting, by introducing input/output and bandwidth             throttling per VB.         -   System fairness by managing the node system resource             allocation to the IO subsystem used for storage.         -   VB virtualisation from SAV volumes, i.e many small VBs from             one large SAV         -   VB tiering by building a VB across multiple SAV tiers of             varying QoS

The U-nodes 2 provide greater flexibility thrall conventional storage architectures. To illustrate TO one such use case, consider FIG. 9, an array of SP (eg. JBOD or storage Arrays) is connected to all U-Nodes. In this configuration since no U-Node holds any specific storage context, state or physically attached storage, any U-node can fail and the resources managed by that node can be managed by any remaining node. This allows N+1 failover operation of any U-node. Each SV instance is attached to a set of provider devices by the MetaC controller, if any U-Node fails any other U-Node can be reconfigured by the MetaC controller to take over the provider devices, recreate the VB resources for the recreated consumer VAs. No loss of any U-Node leads to a system failure as all context, state and data can be recovered through the MetaC controller.

All U-Node SV instances together form a HA cluster, each U-node having a failover buddy. FIGS. 6 to 8 illustrate joining the cluster and finding a default failover “buddy”. All members of the cluster are logically linked vertically and horizontally so that in the event of a node failure the cluster is aware of the failure and the appropriate failover of resources to another node can occur.

Referring again to the prior art architectures of FIGS. 1 and 2 we provide the following analysis. The cost of the FIG. 3 is lower than FIGS. 1 and 2. The cost for the system of FIG. 3 in terms of rack space required and hardware is the lowest as no dedicated storage array appliances are required. All VA nodes are identical, in the simplest implementation only JBOD storage is required. We can define the value of a Rack Value (RV) by an equation which calculates the number of software appliances that can run within a rack, as follows:

-   RV (RackValue)=(V*(Mc)*S*(D*Ud)*Kc/(k*1); Uc+Ud=42, 42 is the height     of an Industrial Rack in U units. -   V is the number of Virtual Appliances per Core (C) in the RACK -   C is the number of Cores per U of Rack Space -   Uc is the number of U space allocated to Cores -   D is the number of Disks per U of Rack Space -   S is the average size of the disks -   Ud is the number of U space allocated to Disks -   Kc is the coupling constant between Virtual appliances and storage,     a larger Kc implies faster coupling between storage media virtual     appliance. -   k is a function k=f(C/D) -   l is a function l=f(C/BladeMemoryGigs)

This equation describes the value of the Rack in terms of its number of CPU Cores, spinning disks and their size, and the number of Virtual Appliances per core.

To increase the Rack Value this equation needs to be maximised. This invention increases the Rack Value for any given appliance type by:

A) increasing the coupling constant Kc

B) maximizing the amount of U space available for storage and compute nodes.

The invention described maximises Rack Value,

The “U-nodes” 2 each provide compute and storage resources to run the VAs 17. The system 1 increases the Rack Value by a U-node which integrates all resources for the VAs in 1 node. Further integration is possible with network switching but for clarity the main part of the following description is of integration of the storage and compute nodes to provide the U-node. The SV of the U-nodes 2 accesses the provider disk devices resources via a fabric 3.

The U-node 2 is a universal node where compute and storage run on the CPU core resource of the same machine. In the U-node configuration the storage management “SV” is collapsed to the same node as the compute node. A U-node is not the same as a compute node with DAS storage. A U-node SV manages provider devices that that have the same high coupling as DAS storage, however the SV is tolerant to fault conditions and is physically decoupled from the SP. The fault tolerance is achieved by the ability of the SV resource to migrate from any one U-node to any other U-node. In this way the U-node SV appears as an N+1 failover controller. Under failure conditions, failover is achieved between the N participating U-nodes by moving the resource management, the SV and the its product the VB and not by the traditional method of providing multiple failover paths from a storage array to the storage consumer.

Again referring to FIG. 5 in a storage system 30 a user of the system (“Tenant”) requests a virtual appliance (VA) to be run. The MetaC component 31 is responsible for dispatching workloads (such as VBs) to the U-Nodes 2 interfacing directly with the Hypervisor application 18 of the node 2. The MetaC controller 31 is not the manager of the U-Node infrastructure it is simply the dispatcher of loads to the U-Nodes. FIG. 6 also shows disk resources 34 linked with the U-nodes 2 via a fabric 35.

The Hypervisor application 18 has an API which allows creation and execution of virtual machines (VM) 17 within their assigned networks. The Hypervisor application 18 requests CPU, memory, and storage resources from the CPU, memory and storage managers 12-14. The storage representation is implemented as if the storage were local, that is the SV VB is a virtualisation of a storage provider resource.

The storage provider 34 is generally understood to be disks or storage arrays attached directly or through a fabric. The SV manages all storage provider devices such as disks, storage arrays or object stores. In this way the SV is a universal consumer of storage from any storage provider and provides VB block devices to any consumer. FIG. 11 shows the how the SV and MetaC controller manage storage providers. The MetaC has a provisioning plane which can create storage array volumes (SAVs). These SAVs can be imported over a fabric/protocol to the SV. The SV virtualises the SRVs through its manager functions to virtual block devices (VBs). VBs are then exported to whatever consumer requires them. The local SV is composed of a number of slave managers which implement the tasks of importing SAVs, creating VBs and exporting to storage consumers or storage centric services. The SV does not keep context or state information. The MetaC controller keeps this information. This allows the, slave SV layer to fail and no loss of information occurs in the system.

The SV 20 of each U-node 2 is attached to storage providers through an S_IOC bus 35. The S_IOC bus 35 is a fabric organised so that all U-Nodes 2 have the same access to the fabric 35 and the attached provider devices of the fabric 35. An example of an S-bus fabric 35 is where all devices can be discovered by all of the U-Nodes 2. Each SV 20 in each U-Node 2 is allocated a number of provider resources (drives or SAVs) that it manages by the MetaC controller 31. Once configured, the SV 20 behaves as if it were a locally attached storage array with high coupling (eg. SAS bus) between the disks 34 and the U-Node 2. FIG. 5 shows how multiple U-Nodes 2 provide resources to create multiple appliances on a set of U-Nodes.

It is advantageous if all nodes are logically identical and therefore the configuration of the U-nodes 2 for failover operation requires algorithms for leadership election between peers. Each node “leadership role” follows the state machine as shown in FIGS. 7 and 8. The leader is elected by all participating nodes in the system. A leader node can fail without causing the system to fail. The elected leader is responsible for logically organising the U-nodes 2 into two teams with vertical and horizontal failure links as shown in FIG. 6. The steady state of the system is “Nodes Paired”, once a leader is elected the leader's role is to create a configuration of nodes as shown in FIG. 6. In the case of a U-node failure, the remaining configured nodes use their knowledge of pairing to recover from the U-node failure. Failover and fallback of resources occurs between horizontally paired nodes. The leader is responsible for creating pairs, and all nodes 2 are responsible for making sure their vertical and horizontal pairs are present and functioning. Each node's pairing state will follow the state machine as shown in FIG. 8. FIG. 6 shows a configured system after leadership election and configuration of horizontal and vertical pairing. Any node that fails will have a failover partner. Failover partners are from Team A to Team B. Should two paired nodes fail at the same time the vertical pairing will detect the failure and initiate failover procedures. Should a leader fail a leadership election process occurs as nodes will return to the Voter state.

System Failure.

Rack systems are in general very sensitive to component failures. In the case of a U-Node 2 since all components are identical any failure of a node requires that the paired controller runs the failed U-node's workload.

In the case of a system failure, as shown in FIG. 9 since all U-Nodes are identical any node failure will cause the workload to start on a remaining paired controller. Should a pair fail then the team is responsible for creating a new pair of controllers and distributing the workload.

The MetaC controller 31 is also shown in FIG. 9. It holds information about the system to allow each node 2 to make decisions regarding the optimal distribution of workloads.

The virtual appliances (VA) that use the storage provided by the SV 20 may run locally on the U-Node 2 where the SV 20 has migrated to or can be run on another U-Node 2. In the case of a VA 17 running on a remote U-Node the storage resource is provided to the SV as a network volume over the fabric protocol (such as iSCSI over TCP/IP).

System Recovery.

In the event of a U-Node 2 recovering from a system failure it will negotiate with its pair to failback its workload.

FIG. 6 also illustrates this mechanism in which:

-   U-node 2 and U-node 3 are horizontally paired, and -   U-node 1 and U-node 2 are vertically paired.

Failure F1.

In this failure mode the CPU no longer functions and the node 2 is detected as DEAD

The node H_Paired device will recover the workload.

Failure F2.

In this failure mode the memory no longers functions and the node is detected as DEAD

The node H_Paired device will recover the workload.

Failure F3/F4.

In these failure modes the network no longers functions and the node is detected as alive but not communicating (example a network cable/switch has failed). In this mode the node may be killed (DEAD) depending on the severity of the failure.

The node H_Paired device will recover the workload.

Failure F5.

In this failure mode the access to the disk bus no longers functions and the node 2 is detected as alive but storage is not available. In this mode the node will failover its s-Array function (SV 20) to its H_paired device which will recover the storage function and export the storage devices to the U-node through the N-IOC bus.

Failure F6 (U-Node 2 and U-Node 4 Failure).

In this Failure mode the vertical V-Pair device will detect and node failure and instantiate a recovery process. Should no H_Paired device exist the V_Paired device will recover the workload.

U-Node v/s Compute with DAS

A compute node with DAS storage is similar to a U-Node except the storage node and compute node are, bound together and if one fails the other also fails. In the U-node configuration if the U-node fails the virtual appliances 7 can re-start on an alternative node as discussed in the failure modes above.

The U-Node architecture allows one to increase the value RV (Rack Value) by moving the storage array software from a dedicated storage appliance into the same node. This node (U-Node) provides compute, network and storage resources to each FLAN within the node.

The increase in Rack Value comes from

-   -   A) Less wasted space on storage appliances     -   B) Higher coupling speed between compute and storage

Controller 31 Operation.

The metaC software control entity 31 is responsible for the partioning and fitting of SP resources to each U-Node. In the case of a failure it detects the U-Node failure and migrates failed SV VBs to available U_nodes. The metaC maintains a map and dependency list of SV resources to every SP storage array. The SV provides storage either to its dependent appliances locally through the HyperVisor 15 or if the Virtual Appliance 17 cannot be run locally storage is provided using a network protocol on the N-IOC (network IOC bus).

To satisfy the resource requirements of the Virtual Appliances (VA) in each VLAN, local CPU, memory and networking resources are consumed from the available CPU, memory, and networking resources. The Hypervisor application 18 manages the requesting and allocation of these resources. The Hypervisor application 18 uses an API (Storage Provisioning Requester API (SPR)) to request storage from the MetaC provisioning engine, the MetaC creates volumes on the SP disks 34 and exports the storage over a number of conventional protocols (an iSCSI, CIFS or NFS share) to the SV 20. The SV 20 than exports the storage resource to the VA through the Hypervisor 15 or as an operating system 16 block device to a storage centric service. A VA may also use the SPR. API directly for self provisioning.

In the case of a failure mode occuring a paired node will recover the workload of the failed device. In the case of a failed pair of nodes the metaC controller 31 will distribute the workloads over the remaining nodes. U-nodes are identical in the sense that they rank equally between each other and if required nm the same workloads. However U-nodes can be built using hardware systems of different capabilities (i.e #CPU cores, #Gigabytes of memory, S_IOC/N_IOC adaptors). This difference in hardware capabilities means that pairing is not arbitrary but pairs are created according to a pairing policy. Pairing policies may be best-with-best or best-with-worst or random etc. In a best-with-best pairing policy U-Nodes can then in the nominal case be ranked with highest to lowest SLA (Service Level Agreement, eg Gold, Silver, Bronze). In a best-with-worst pairing policy the average pair SLA of all pairs are approximately equivalent. The MetaC controller manages workload dispatching according to policies setup in the MetaC controller.

FIG. 10 shows how the policies are used to dispatch workloads to the paired U-nodes. In this example U-Nodes are associated by capability into various SLA groups. Depending on the workload, required SLA and resource availibility on the existing U-Nodes the MetaC controller 31 will dispatch the workload to the appropriate U-node. For any workload the MetaC controller 31 is responsible for understanding the existing workloads, the U-node failure coverage & resiliency, the required SLA and dispatching new workloads to the most appropriate U-Node. For example the workload SLA may require High Availibility and therefore only functioning paired nodes are candidates to run the workload.

The invention is not limited to the embodiments described, but may be varied in construction and detail. 

1. A data storage system comprising: at least two universal nodes each comprising: CPU resources, memory resources, network interface resources, and a storage virtualizer; storage providers; and a system controller, wherein: the storage virtualizer is attached to said storage providers through a storage bus organized so that a plurality of universal nodes have the same access to a fabric and storage providers attached to the fabric, each storage virtualizer in each universal node is allocated by the system controller a number of storage provider resources that it manages, the system controller being configured to maintain a map for dependency of storage consumers to storage provider resources, and storing context and state of each storage virtualizer such that each storage virtualizer is a slave device, each storage virtualizer is configured to provide storage to dependent storage consumers, said storage being through a network protocol to said storage providers, each storage virtualizer is configured to manage storage providers and is tolerant to fault conditions and the fault tolerance is achieved by an ability of the storage virtualizer to migrate to any other universal node, in which if any universal node fails any other universal node can be reconfigured by the system controller to take over the storage providers by recovering storage virtualizer context and state held by the system controller; and the storage consumers include virtual appliances which are configured to run locally on a universal node where the storage virtualizer has migrated to or can be run on another universal node.
 2. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said CPU, memory, network interface and storage virtualizer resources are connected between buses within each universal node, wherein at least one of said buses links said resources with virtual appliance instances, and wherein each universal node comprises a Hypervisor application for the virtual appliance instances.
 3. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein a plurality of storage devices are configured to be discovered by a plurality of universal nodes, and wherein each storage virtualizer is configured to behave as if it were a locally attached storage array with coupling between the storage devices and the universal node.
 4. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the system controller is configured to partition and fit the virtual appliances within each universal node.
 5. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the universal nodes are configured so that in the case of a system failure each universal node will failover resources and workloads to a paired universal node.
 6. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein a Hypervisor application manages requesting and allocation of resources within each universal node.
 7. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said CPU, memory, network interface and storage virtualizer resources are connected between buses within each universal node, wherein at least one of said buses links said resources with virtual appliance instances, and wherein each universal node comprises a Hypervisor application for the virtual appliance instances; and wherein the system further comprises a provisioning engine, and the Hypervisor application is configured to use an API to request storage from the provisioning engine, which is in turn configured to request a storage array as a virtualization of a storage provider resource to create a storage volume and export it to the Hypervisor application through the storage virtualizer.
 8. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said CPU, memory, network interface and storage virtualizer resources are connected between buses within each universal node, wherein at least one of said buses links said resources with virtual appliance instances, and wherein each universal node comprises a Hypervisor application for the virtual appliance instances; and wherein the system further comprises a provisioning engine, and the Hypervisor application is configured to use an API to request storage from the provisioning engine, which is in turn configured to request a storage array to create a storage volume and export it to the Hypervisor application through the storage virtualizer; and wherein, to satisfy storage requirements of virtual appliances in a universal node, each local storage array is configured to respond to requests from a storage provisioning requester running on the universal node.
 9. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the universal nodes are identical.
 10. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the system controller is configured to dispatch workloads including virtual appliances to the universal nodes interfacing directly with the system controller or with a Hypervisor application.
 11. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said CPU, memory, network interface and storage virtualizer resources are connected between buses within each universal node, wherein at least one of said buses links said resources with virtual appliance instances, and wherein each universal node comprises a Hypervisor application for the virtual appliance instances; and wherein the system controller is configured to dispatch workloads including storage provider virtual blocks to the universal nodes interfacing directly with a Hypervisor application of the universal node.
 12. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein said CPU, memory, network interface and storage virtualizer resources are connected between buses within each universal node, wherein at least one of said buses links said resources with virtual appliance instances, and wherein each universal node comprises a Hypervisor application for the virtual appliance instances; and wherein the Hypervisor application has an API which allows creation and execution of virtual appliances, and the Hypervisor application requests CPU, memory, and storage resources from the CPU, memory and storage managers, and a storage representation is implemented as if the storage were local, in which the storage virtualization virtual block is a virtualization of a storage provider resource.
 13. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the system controller is configured to hold information about the system to allow each universal node to make decisions regarding optimal distribution of workloads.
 14. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the system controller is configured to be responsible for partitioning and fitting of storage provider resources to each universal node, and is configured to, in the case of a failure, detect the failure and migrate failed storage virtualizer virtual blocks to available universal nodes, and the system controller is configured to maintain a map and dependency list of storage virtualizer resources to every storage provider storage array.
 15. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein each universal node is configured to execute a leadership role which follows a state machine, in which there are voter and leader states, and to return to a voter state if a leader fails.
 16. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the storage virtualizer comprises functions for targets, managers, and provider management and said functions are adapted to communicate with the system controller.
 17. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the storage virtualizer is configured to consume storage from the storage provider and to provide virtual block devices to the storage consumers.
 18. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the storage virtualizer is configured to perform added value functions including one or more of: data protection by mapping and replicating virtual blocks to multiple storage array volumes, data scaling by striping a virtual block across multiple storage array volumes, and redundant multipathing by mapping a virtual block to different instances of a storage array volume on alternate paths.
 19. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein the storage virtualizer is configured to perform added value function including one or more of: node-side caching between a virtual black and a storage array volume, virtual block rate limiting, system fairness by managing resource allocation to an input/output sub-system used for storage, virtual block virtualization for storage array volumes, and virtual block tiering by building a virtual block across multiple storage array volume tiers of varying quantity of service criteria.
 20. The storage system as claimed in claim 1, wherein each universal node is configured to increase a rack value for any virtual appliance by increasing a coupling constant Kc and maximizing amount of space available for storage and compute nodes, said rack value being a number of virtual appliances which run within a rack.
 21. The storage system as claimed in claim 20, wherein the rack value is defined as RV (RackValue)=(V*(C*Uc)*S*(D*Ud)*Kc/(k*1); Uc+Ud=42, 42 is the height of an Industrial Rack in U units, and V is the number of virtual appliances per core (C) in the rack, C is the number of cores per unit (U) of rack space, Uc is the number of U spaces allocated to cores, D is the number of disks per U of rack space, S is the average size of the disks, Ud is the number of U space allocated to disks, Kc is the coupling constant between virtual appliances and storage, in which a larger Kc implies faster coupling between storage media virtual appliance, k is a function k=f(C/D), and l is a function l=f(C/BladeMemoryGigs). 